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| Performance and Maintainance of Windows Vista A forum for performance and maintenance tasks in Windows Vista. (microsoft.public.windows.vista.performance_maintainance) |
| Tags: drive, out, running, space |
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Hi,
As described in the subject line, i am facing a c drive running out of space problem. The following are the details related to the same: OS : Windows Vista Home Premium SP: Service Pack 1 Installed Total hard disk capacity: 100GB C Drive: 20 GB D Drive: 80 GB I thought it could be because of the program files folder that i am facing the issue but found that its size is 2.43GB. All the other folders are less but windows folder is taking the maximum share i.e. 14 GB. All the programs i have installed in the PC, i have taken enough care to specify their installation path to drive D. Still i am facing this problem. Drive C has about 60 GB free space. Is there any tool using which i could delete the partition so that i can get rid of this problem. Any other suggestions are also welcome. Thanks in Advance. Pradeep |
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On Sat, 19 Jul 2008 22:25:00 -0700, Pradeep
wrote: Hi, As described in the subject line, i am facing a c drive running out of space problem. The following are the details related to the same: OS : Windows Vista Home Premium SP: Service Pack 1 Installed Total hard disk capacity: 100GB C Drive: 20 GB D Drive: 80 GB I thought it could be because of the program files folder that i am facing the issue but found that its size is 2.43GB. All the other folders are less but windows folder is taking the maximum share i.e. 14 GB. All the programs i have installed in the PC, i have taken enough care to specify their installation path to drive D. Still i am facing this problem. Drive C has about 60 GB free space. Is there any tool using which i could delete the partition so that i can get rid of this problem. Any other suggestions are also welcome. You say your entire drive is 100GB, and C takes 20 of that and it's getting crowded. Then you say you have 60GB of free space on C. WHA?? |
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On Sun, 20 Jul 2008 00:40:00 -0700, Pradeep
wrote: Iam sorry Nonny, I wanted to say that Drive D has 60 GB free space. You have your programs installed on D, so deleting it would cause you huge problems... right? You need to shrink D and give the open space to C. You will need a third-party partition manager to do that. If you think you'll never need such a thing again, you will need one that you can use on a trial basis that comes with no limitations. http://www.terabyteunlimited.com/dow...generation.htm It USED to come with no limitations. I used the registered version looooooong ago. Check it out. |
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Use a third party application, eg Partition Magic to combine what was D to
C, thereby removing the D partition. Your drive is too small to bother about partitioning "Pradeep" wrote in message ... Iam sorry Nonny, I wanted to say that Drive D has 60 GB free space. Thanks, Pradeep |
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On Sun, 20 Jul 2008 14:21:25 +0100, "DL" address@invalid wrote:
Use a third party application, eg Partition Magic to combine what was D to C, thereby removing the D partition. If he simply does that, all his programs, which are installed on D: will fail to work, because they will be on C: and Windows expects to find them on D: He would also have to either try one of the programs that search out and try to change all those many references from D: to C:, or else uninstall, then reinstall the programs. My experience with programs that look for and change the references has been less than satisfactory, and I don't recommend them. The best way to do this is to uninstall and reinstall. His easiest course of action at this point, by far, would be to use a third-party program to make D: smaller and C: bigger. However, before using such a program and taking such a big step--either your way or mine--he should first be sure he has a current backup of anything he can't afford to lose. Although there's no reason to expect a problem, things *can* go wrong. By the way, Pradeep should note that programs should normally be installed on the same partition as \Windows. Although some people install them on a different partition because they think that they are protected there, and won't be lost if Windows ever has to be reinstalled, this is *not* correct. If Windows is reinstalled, all the many references to the program within it are lost. The programs (all except for an occasional small one) have to be reinstalled too. You can read my advice on partitioning in the article "Understanding Disk Partitioning" at http://www.computorcompanion.com/LPMArticle.asp?ID=326 Your drive is too small to bother about partitioning "Pradeep" wrote in message ... Iam sorry Nonny, I wanted to say that Drive D has 60 GB free space. Thanks, Pradeep -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
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First of all try to 'free up some disk space ' (http://www.winvistaclub.com/t73.html)from your C Drive. Next you may have to see if you can 'Extend the C partition' (http://www.winvistaclub.com/t11.html) using Vista's Disk Management utility. You can not merge partitions in Vista with this Utility. Also note that you can extend only to the right; if you are desirous of extending the partition to the left, you may have to use a 3rd party utility, like Acronis. Pradeep;64553 Wrote: Hi, As described in the subject line, i am facing a c drive running out of space problem. The following are the details related to the same: OS : Windows Vista Home Premium SP: Service Pack 1 Installed Total hard disk capacity: 100GB C Drive: 20 GB D Drive: 80 GB I thought it could be because of the program files folder that i am facing the issue but found that its size is 2.43GB. All the other folders are less but windows folder is taking the maximum share i.e. 14 GB. All the programs i have installed in the PC, i have taken enough care to specify their installation path to drive D. Still i am facing this problem. Drive C has about 60 GB free space. Is there any tool using which i could delete the partition so that i can get rid of this problem. Any other suggestions are also welcome. Thanks in Advance. Pradeep -- HappyAndyK www.WinVistaClub.com ------------------------------------------------------------------------ HappyAndyK's Profile: http://winvistaclub.com/forum/member.php?userid=4 View this thread: http://winvistaclub.com/forum/showthread.php?t=15282 |
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Disable system restore. Vista needs 40GB + RAM size. For me it was 56GB, 40GB + 16GB for Paging. -- SCSIraidGURU Michael A. McKenney 'www.SCSIraidGURU.com' (http://www.SCSIraidGURU.com) Supermicro X7DWA-N server board pair of Intel E5430 quad core 2.66 GHz Xeons 16GB DDR667 SAS RAID eVGA 8800 GTS 640 MB video card |
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How much Ram do you have installed? I have 2 GB Ram and don't run a swap file. The only time I got a "low memory" error msg was because I kept trying to play a bad video file and without realizing it I had 1/2 dozen copies of VLC Media Player running. If you must use swap, move it to D: -- MilesAhead "Why is half the world named after a guy I never heard of?" |
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On Sun, 20 Jul 2008 15:55:12 -0500, MilesAhead
wrote: How much Ram do you have installed? I have 2 GB Ram and don't run a swap file. It's called the "page" file in Windows XP. Turning it off is a very bad thing to do, regardless of how much RAM you have. That's for two reasons: 1. If you don't have a page file, you can't use all the RAM you have. That's because Windows preallocates virtual memory in anticipation of a possible need for it, even though that allocated virtual memory may never be used. Without a page file, that allocation has to be made in real memory, thus tying up that memory and preventing it from being used for any purpose. 2. There is never a benefit in not having a page file. If it isn't needed, it won't be used. Don't confuse allocated memory with used memory. The only time I got a "low memory" error msg was because I kept trying to play a bad video file and without realizing it I had 1/2 dozen copies of VLC Media Player running. If you must use swap, move it to D: Assuming that D: is a second partition, that's also bad advice. Putting the Page File on a second partition is not a good idea, and can hurt your performance. What it does is move the page file to a location on the hard drive distant from the other frequently-used data on the drive. The result is that every time Windows needs to use the page file, the time to get to it and back from it is increased. Putting the page file on a second *physical* drive is a good idea, since it decreases head movement, but not to a second partition on a single drive. A good rule of thumb is that the page file should be on the most-used partition of the least-used physical drive. For almost everyone with a single drive, that's C:. -- Ken Blake, Microsoft MVP - Windows Desktop Experience Please Reply to the Newsgroup |
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